If Health Law Falls, Coverage For Young Adults Gets Tricky04:12

Jackson Cahn, who graduated from Whitman College in Walla Walla, Wash., is one of the 3 million young adults the Obama administration says would have risked going without insurance if the health care law hadn't allowed them to stay on their parents' policies. Because of the law, his mother, June Blender, was able to add him to her insurance.

When it comes to health care, even the seemingly easy things become hard.

It's one of the most successful — and popular — provisions of the law that have taken effect so far. Earlier this week the Obama administration announced that between September 2010 and the end of 2011, more than 3 million young adults under age 26 who would otherwise have gone without insurance gained coverage by remaining on their parents' health plans.

Last week, major health insurance companies, including United Healthcare, Aetna and Humana, announced they would continue to offer the benefit even if the Supreme Court strikes down the law when it issues its ruling, which is expected next week. Even some Republicans say they support the idea of letting young people remain on their parents' health plans.

But it turns out that might not be so easy.

"This could have adverse tax consequences, both to the employee whose child is on the plan and to the employer, for purposes of payroll taxes," said James Klein, president of the American Benefits Council, which represents large-employer health plans and companies that provide services to those plans.

How's that? Well, says Klein, the problem is that lots of those young adults are no longer dependents of their parents for tax purposes. So if the employer continues to provide coverage to that adult child, the value of that insurance could be considered taxable income to the parent. Under the health law, such coverage is not treated as taxable income.

As an example, he says, "if the value of adding a child onto your policy is $500 a month, that's $6,000 a year. So that's $6,000 of extra income on which you would be taxed, plus the payroll taxes that you the employee and the employer would be paying on behalf of that $6,000."

And while that could be a lot of money for some people, he says, the money is only part of the problem.

"It's the utter confusion that this would cause for employers. Because after all, there would be some 24-year-old kids who are legal dependents, for whom there would be no income tax owed," Klein said. "And then there would be others for whom they're not legal dependents and so there would be tax that would be owed. It would be extraordinarily confusing."

Then there's the question of whether workers and employers might owe back taxes for coverage that's been provided already. Klein says the Obama administration could theoretically take care of the problem by having the IRS issue some sort of clarification. But he worries that like everything else to do with the health law, even that could get caught up in partisan politics.

"I'm just afraid that rather than a quick resolution that provides clarity, both sides could arguably use this for their political benefit," he said.